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Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal

The ventricular layer of the spinal cord is remodelled during embryonic development and ultimately forms the ependymal cell lining of the adult central canal, which retains neural stem cell potential. This anatomical transformation involves the process of dorsal collapse; however, accompanying chang...

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Autores principales: Cañizares, Marco A., Albors, Aida Rodrigo, Singer, Gail, Suttie, Nicolle, Gorkic, Metka, Felts, Paul, Storey, Kate G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6956438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31670387
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joa.13094
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author Cañizares, Marco A.
Albors, Aida Rodrigo
Singer, Gail
Suttie, Nicolle
Gorkic, Metka
Felts, Paul
Storey, Kate G.
author_facet Cañizares, Marco A.
Albors, Aida Rodrigo
Singer, Gail
Suttie, Nicolle
Gorkic, Metka
Felts, Paul
Storey, Kate G.
author_sort Cañizares, Marco A.
collection PubMed
description The ventricular layer of the spinal cord is remodelled during embryonic development and ultimately forms the ependymal cell lining of the adult central canal, which retains neural stem cell potential. This anatomical transformation involves the process of dorsal collapse; however, accompanying changes in tissue organisation and cell behaviour as well as the precise origin of cells contributing to the central canal are not well understood. Here, we describe sequential localised cell rearrangements which accompany the gradual attrition of the spinal cord ventricular layer during development. This includes local breakdown of the pseudostratified organisation of the dorsal ventricular layer prefiguring dorsal collapse and evidence for a new phenomenon, ventral dissociation, during which the ventral‐most floor plate cells separate from a subset that are retained around the central canal. Using cell proliferation markers and cell‐cycle reporter mice, we further show that following dorsal collapse, ventricular layer attrition involves an overall reduction in cell proliferation, characterised by an intriguing increase in the percentage of cells in G1/S. In contrast, programmed cell death does not contribute to ventricular layer remodelling. By analysing transcript and protein expression patterns associated with key signalling pathways, we provide evidence for a gradual decline in ventral sonic hedgehog activity and an accompanying ventral expansion of initial dorsal bone morphogenetic protein signalling, which comes to dominate the forming the central canal lining. This study identifies multiple steps that may contribute to spinal cord ventricular layer attrition and adds to increasing evidence for the heterogeneous origin of the spinal cord ependymal cell population, which includes cells from the floor plate and the roof plate as well as ventral progenitor domains.
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spelling pubmed-69564382020-01-17 Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal Cañizares, Marco A. Albors, Aida Rodrigo Singer, Gail Suttie, Nicolle Gorkic, Metka Felts, Paul Storey, Kate G. J Anat Original Articles The ventricular layer of the spinal cord is remodelled during embryonic development and ultimately forms the ependymal cell lining of the adult central canal, which retains neural stem cell potential. This anatomical transformation involves the process of dorsal collapse; however, accompanying changes in tissue organisation and cell behaviour as well as the precise origin of cells contributing to the central canal are not well understood. Here, we describe sequential localised cell rearrangements which accompany the gradual attrition of the spinal cord ventricular layer during development. This includes local breakdown of the pseudostratified organisation of the dorsal ventricular layer prefiguring dorsal collapse and evidence for a new phenomenon, ventral dissociation, during which the ventral‐most floor plate cells separate from a subset that are retained around the central canal. Using cell proliferation markers and cell‐cycle reporter mice, we further show that following dorsal collapse, ventricular layer attrition involves an overall reduction in cell proliferation, characterised by an intriguing increase in the percentage of cells in G1/S. In contrast, programmed cell death does not contribute to ventricular layer remodelling. By analysing transcript and protein expression patterns associated with key signalling pathways, we provide evidence for a gradual decline in ventral sonic hedgehog activity and an accompanying ventral expansion of initial dorsal bone morphogenetic protein signalling, which comes to dominate the forming the central canal lining. This study identifies multiple steps that may contribute to spinal cord ventricular layer attrition and adds to increasing evidence for the heterogeneous origin of the spinal cord ependymal cell population, which includes cells from the floor plate and the roof plate as well as ventral progenitor domains. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-10-31 2020-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6956438/ /pubmed/31670387 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joa.13094 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Journal of Anatomy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Anatomical Society This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Open access.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Cañizares, Marco A.
Albors, Aida Rodrigo
Singer, Gail
Suttie, Nicolle
Gorkic, Metka
Felts, Paul
Storey, Kate G.
Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
title Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
title_full Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
title_fullStr Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
title_full_unstemmed Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
title_short Multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
title_sort multiple steps characterise ventricular layer attrition to form the ependymal cell lining of the adult mouse spinal cord central canal
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6956438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31670387
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joa.13094
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